Abstract
Title: Training the Slaves: The Rabble, Goyim, and Other Cattle
Author: Periša Reljić
Summary: In this work, the author examines socio-psychological engineering and the methods used to keep the majority of the population in a state of constant passivity and obedience. Utilizing terms such as “raja” (the oppressed rabble) and “goyim” (a term for non-Jews often cited in theories regarding secret societies), Reljić deconstructs historical and contemporary mechanisms through which human beings are reduced to the level of resources or “cattle” serving the interests of a minority.
Key Themes:
- The Psychology of Voluntary Servitude: An investigation into why the masses obey a small number of rulers and how fear is utilized as a primary tool of control.
- The Terminology of Contempt: An analysis of the language elites use for common people, which the author sees as evidence of their belief in their own superiority and their “right” to exploitation.
- Mechanisms of Training: The roles of media, religion, education, and the tax system in suppressing rebellion and creating a “domesticated” citizen.
- Economic Dependency: How debt slavery and artificially induced poverty prevent individuals from contemplating freedom, focusing them solely on biological survival.
Conclusion: Reljić concludes that “training” is only successful as long as the individual is unaware of the process in which they participate. The text is a call for a radical awakening of self-awareness and the rejection of imposed inferior identities, asserting that freedom is, above all, an internal act of breaking psychological chains.
First time published: February 25th 2015.
Training the Slaves: The Rabble, Goyim, and Other Cattle
The history of civilization is, in fact, a history of training. From the first pharaohs to the modern technocrats of Davos, the goal has remained unchanged: how to turn a conscious human being into a productive, silent, and obedient biological unit.
When we speak of the “rabble” (raja), we are not speaking of a social class, but of a state of mind. It is a state where the victim begins to love their chains, or at the very least, accepts them as a natural inevitability. The elites have perfected the “carrot and stick” method. Today, the “stick” is the fear of global pandemics, wars, and climate apocalypses, while the “carrot” consists of cheap entertainment, debt-fueled consumerism, and the illusion of choice at the ballot box.
The term “goyim” or “cattle” (marva) in the vocabulary of those who consider themselves the “Architects of the World” is not merely an insult—it is a functional definition. For them, the masses are a resource to be managed, sheared, and, when necessary, sent to the slaughterhouse of history for interests they will never truly understand.
The modern “Kindergarten” of global education and the hypnotic flicker of screens have completed what the inquisitions and dictatorships of the past could not. They have occupied the human mind. A person who is constantly tired, in debt, and fed with trivialities has no time for the truth. They are trained to respond to signals, to hate on command, and to fear their neighbor.
But every training has its flaw. The flaw is the moment of awakening. The moment a person realizes they are not “cattle” or “rabble,” but a sovereign being with a soul. That is the only fear the global masters truly have—that the “cattle” will stop being cattle and become People again.